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Tuesday, December 8, 2009

Tuesday's Trees- Carpinus caroliniana

-- Ironwood, American Hornbeam, Musclewood- this tree goes by many names.

My first introduction to this tree was at the Adkins Arboretum along the eastern shore of Maryland. The visit was part of our Master Gardener trip. The group I walked through the woods with had a few Tree Stewards in training and it seemed like we were in heaven.

Many of the Ironwood we came across were very young trees and making the ID with these young trees was primarily with the growth structure of the trunk. The leaves are so similar to beech and birch trees. The leaves are double serrated, oblong, ovate. They occur alternately from the twig. It is green during the growing season and in the fall it turns orange to red to yellow. Quite often the leaves hang on through the winter. Here is a link to Sweetbay's web posting with beautiful fall color.

It is a slow growing tree, reaching heights of 20- 30 feet with similar spread. Typically it is an understory tree and as such has an open canopy. If planted in more sun the canopy is denser. This native tree is hardy from zones 3- 9. Often seen as a multi-stemmed tree, the stems are crooked, smooth and light gray in color. The trunk has the appearance of a muscular limb…. One of the ways we were able to make our identification on a young tree was to feel the base of the trunk. It does feel like someone has a flexed muscle.
C. caroliniana is a monoecious tree with both male and female catkins in the spring. The fruit is a long nutlet and it a food source for birds. Large seed production occurs every 3- 5 years. The germination rate is low. The Silvics manual is an excellent reference guide for this tree.
Common names for many plants are often used for more than one plant variety. I first learned this tree to be an Ironwood, but there is another tree called Ironwood—Ostrya virginiana. Another tree in the birch family, also a crooked trunked tree…but this Ironwood has ridged bark, unlike the American Hornbeam (Carpinus caroliniana) that has a very smooth trunk.
Wonderful resources for the Carpinus caroliniana- MOBOT- wonderful pictures What Tree Is This site- nice quick referenceUNCONN- concise information USDA data sheet- great links to other informationNCState- quick list of information, no photoVirginia Tech fact sheet easy to print fact sheet to carry with youForestry Service a great reference

Next tree- Magnolia grandifloraSorry for the delay in getting this posted, life happens.

9 comments:

Janet,Just about a month ago we found several Ironwoods on our property. I knew they were in the woods here lower down the creek. Enjoyed this post. I'm looking forward to the Magnolia grandifolia post, but how can you describe the fragrance?

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